Mastodon

21.12.22

Constructing a glorious spaceship

Like a little child again

If I was a little boy again instead of a middle-aged man, I don't think I'd built much more than the minifigs and maybe the robot, and left the rest for my father to build. It's been a few years since the last time I did that, and I don't think I t get to enjoy the "would you build this for me?" for much longer anymore

First pieces

The classic red-suited space lego person with the good old smiley face. I used to have a ridiculous amount of these people, in various colours. Now I had a couple, shiny and fresh. Words failed to describe how incredibly excited I was with this minifig. The robot was also fun, a traditional few-piece construct that still had character. Or maybe I was looking at all this through strong nostalgia-tinted glasses. It was a clear possibility.


Technic frame

Like I guess most of these "old kids" sets, the Explorer's core was formed from a healthy amount of Technic bits. There, in the middle, was the front landing gear's shock absorber set, while the funky frames in the sides fooled me. I had expected the main/side landing gear to be installed inside them, but nope, that wasn't it.



After the core the whole bottom was simply covered with grey plates. Only the landing gear pads and those centrally located repulsor engines brought some diversity. Not that this was going to be ogled at from below, anyway.

So far the top side had revealed nothing of how it was going to actually look or behave like.

Slowly, phase by phase the ship's interior started getting built. I was again very excited whenever I found some classic pieces that I hadn't seen elsewhere in decades.


While building the back end's inwards-turning edges the back ramp was a bit on the way. These angled things were a bit flimsy feeling at least at this point. Still, the feeling of progress was great now that the construction had moved on from the insides to the exterior details.


The nose with some, eh, antennae

Of course the spaceship's nose had an upscaled version of the classic forward-pointing double-antenna (or exhaust pipe, whatever role they had in builds) that never in the history of playtime were laser cannons or anything, oh no.


The ship's nose also got a good amount of greebling on it, this started reminding me of an Imperial-class Star Destroyer. Perhaps that came from the shape and grey colouring of the ship.


Wings all around

The back end had gotten the outer edges already nicely paneled, now the top surfaces got done, and the same paneling and greebling work continued around the sides of the craft. They ended up pretty neat, the greeblies hiding some panel lines and other crimes.





Internal fun

To the very rear of the science vessel, right above the hinged rear ramp, a smooth-surfaced flat black slab got inserted. The slab was freely floating in little tracks, just a couple of small pieces at the center of mass -end prevented it from freely falling out.


Well look at that, there were beds for two galactic explorers, they even allowed sleeping with the oxygen tanks on. While to of the crew worked or otherwise scienced around, the other two could enjoy a resting shift.

Here were more of my old favourite pieces. I didn't remember how many different robots I built with various mailboxes were acting as their head, claw-arms or both.



Computers!

And again I got very excited seeing familiar faces. Oh, if I only had these flat 2x2 versions of the basic displays back in the day, my spaceships, vehicles and bases would've been so much more elegant.

Was the rightmost display running Asteroids? The view also let us believe that maybe the double antennas or pitot tubes in the nose were a degree or two more aggressive than in the eighties. That small 2x1 plate was one of those that I had a healthy pile of, as they were heavily used in Blacktron II sets (and M-Trons and I guess also in Ice Planet 2002).

Aaaaah the Space Lego logo! This flat 2x4 plate was much more convenient and multiuseable than the old 3x6 slopes but... I'd accepted one or two of those too.


That computer panel set from a few photos above ended up as the cockpit's main dashboard, maybe quite naturally as the other main panel had a tactical view on it. I liked the horizontal display between the pilots, with the status of the ship on it. Double thumbs-up for that.

At this point also the non-pilots had their seating set up, in case they weren't always sleeping while off-duty, or something. Polite.

Airlocking

To make the sciencing (and resting) easier the ship had a Star Trek -like sliding airlock door. Because the whole interior of the ship was designed to be sloping towards the front, this wall section had to be angled similarly.


 

The crew compartment got a couple of computer stations with joysticks to adjust who knew what. In the same pass the upper edges were prepared for the yellow canopies.



The necessary three-directional adjustment thrusters were now, instead of being bulky single pieces, constructed from pieces and funnily the rocket nozzles were made out of buckets. Yeah, they were more impressive this way, there was no denying it.

The cargo doors and the general rear end

Behind the crew compartment the remaining space needed walls, so large L-shaped walls/doors were built. I found the white arrows that were built out of bits pretty cool (and fun) as opposed to just using stickers.

Galactic Explorer's rear spoiler was humongous, and it got even more cosmic when both halves were together. I almost built these two pieces in parallel, but I thought I'd make some silly mistakes so I followed the instructions instead.



Engines

Those side-mounted attitude thrusters weren't enough to propel this vessel anywhere in space or various athmospheres, more power was needed. Two huge nozzles were bolted into the backs of the cargo doors.

Maybe, or hopefully, I wasn't the only one who got some flashbacks to the almost quarter of a century -old Phantom Menace and its podracing scene from these extra engines. If you set these in front of a small tub and connected them with some cables, you could definitely see these swooshing by on the Mos Espa's racetrack :p

Instead of being foolish I installed the extra engines onto the wings of the science vessel. These photos also showed that the Project Assistant II had set the white-suited scientists to do some weird excercices from the handlebars.

These were much more impressive than the mostly hidden main engines.


A space rover

With the spaceship completed, all that was left was the tiny moon car, or rover. It was simple but very functional. Just look at how happy the driver was!


14.12.22

Project VII/22

Lego 10497

One day not too long ago, in the grocery store, we had divided into two groups for the last items. I ended up being at the cash registers first. My spouse came a bit later with the Project Assistants, showed the Galaxy Explorer box I had been drooling at for weeks. "Didn't you want this, or do we just return it?"

Box

Of course we didn't return it. Luckily (or unluckily?) they didn't also have the Lion Knight's Castle on the shelves. In the Project Mumblings household my spouse and the Project Assistant I didn't appreciate the Classic Space look but thought that this was a fugly construct. Heretics.


Concerning the instructions

Just the mere front cover of the instructions made me giggly, admiring the logo of the space lego. I was indubitably in the most fruitful cohort, as I loved these things when space lego set were at their peak. Sadly I never had the original Galaxy Explorer myself, neither did my cousins who gave their lego to me when they were disinterested already.

Should they ever make a modern version like this of the 6929, the Starfleet Voyager, I'd buy it without blinking. I had the original and it was awesome. That ship, too, had an openable space in the rear of the craft for stowing tools and whatnot.

Looking at the space theme's timeline I was wondering if the two-coloured space coats and visored helmets really came out that early? Apparently they did. I also had an almost complete collection of the Ice Planet sets, I think I was only missing some of the smallest boxes.

A healthy amount of pieces

This would eat a couple of pleasant evenings, easily. Depending on how much Project Assistant II or the cats would want to pretend to help...

Yay!

8.12.22

Finished: Project VI/22

A Time Machine in a DeLorean

So here it was, the Time Machine set up for the "Roads? Where we're going we don't need roads" -scene from the end of the Back to the Future, with the Lego Collector -style plaque for those who didn't know what they were looking at.

For a fun comparison shot I put all my three DeLoreans next to each other in the same pose, doors opened because the Metal Earth Models DMC-12 was permanently wide open. The doors of the Playmobil car stayed open the best, as you could see from the photo. For the comparison I reverted the Lego car's back into the Plutonium-powered version but forgot to fetch the Playmobil car's detachable power rail.




For the flight mode the Time Machine had a couple (4) transparent 2x1 bricks in the bottom, that you were to move to different places when tilting the wheels.  When the wheels were out of the way, the bricks kept the car "hovering" further from the surface than if it was resting on the wheels, and when the wheels were in use the bricks were moved to more elevated areas so that they wouldn't bump into anything you'd drive over. This was a curious little trick you'd need to be doing repeatedly, but that didn't bother me.

Fooled you! I did remember to get the power rail for one photo at least.

'80s vehicles

Now that we were basking in the glory of the infamous eighties, of course I had to take a couple of photos of the Time Machine next to Optimus Prime. Sadly they were not in the same scale.